Horst Schirmeier2011-02-01 03:18:33 UTCImpress does not include simple slide animations in PDF exports, such as 'incremental' slides which utilize the 'appear' effect. Although not every animation should be exported (probably configurable for each animation step, i.e. A checkbox 'x Animate in PDF export'?), in general it would be helpful to be able to automatically spread out single Impress slides over several PDF pages to simulate the Impress presentation mode behaviour in any PDF viewer.Example: An Impress slide with a custom animation, such as a figure that has an 'appear' effect (configured to 'Start On Click', with a new 'Animate in PDF export' property checked), should export to a PDF with.two. pages that are identical besides one being without, and one with the 'animated' figure. (The user should be able to decide whether he wants to enable this behaviour in the PDF Export options.). Brocas2011-12-23 06:13:23 UTCHelloI also look for this feature and I think that creating a new slide in the PDF after each 'click transition' as said by Horst is the behavior that the user is looking for in the PDF export.Why asking for such a feature? Because currently when I write an Impress document, I use Impress to display it so no problem.BUT when comes the moment to send the slides to meeting attendees (after the meeting has been done), I usually send the PDF document (mainly for cross platform reading).
If my Impress doc has animated (in my case 'start on click') elements, I have to do a 2nd document WITHOUT any animation to be able to export to PDF. Or not using at all the 'animation transition' of Impress since the beginning and doing the transition by hands, creating a slide after each appearing element.So, if LO developers may implement it, it would a great improvement! Ffs2013-11-26 09:26:51 UTCWith the best will in the world you can't say that.odp files are really portable - they tend to fall apart more often than ppt files when moving to the strange computer and a lot of the time you don't have access to LO when giving a presentation.
PDFs are pretty reliable and a workable PDF file is pretty much essential as a back-up if you want to take your presentation somewhere. This feature is therefore really important.It needs to be dead simple - a new PDF page for each transition and no effort spent on trying to make fancy PDFs with fancy transitions because this isn't portable. Inscr2019-11-20 18:56:31 UTCI think this bug is still there in LibreOffice 6.0.7.3. Or at least I do not find how to export a pdf with these 'incremental' slides.Did I miss something? I am a new user of LibreOffice, and I am surprised to see that this feature is not implemented.
For me this is rather essential (are there really some people who do.not. export their presentations to PDF?), and available out of the box in every other presentation software I used.The suggested extension works perfectly for my simple use case (I only use the 'appear' effect, and not with bullet points), so I think integrating it upstream would be an acceptable workaround.Am I at the right place to ask? This bug is marked as 'new' but was opened 8.5 years ago. Copyright information: Please note that all contributions to The Document Foundation Bugzilla are considered to be released under the, unless otherwise specified.
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You can try exporting the presentation to a PDF, where you can simply click through each slide. File - Export to PDF This is what I would do, and it really is the only solution that doesn't involve a ton of re-editing.If you have time, you can also make sure that Powerpoint has the same fonts as Impress, that would solve some issues. Powerpoint and Impress are known to not work well together, even when trying to share versions. Powerpoint simply has more features and is more complex than Impress. In the future, use one or the other.Another thing to mention.
If you can use Libreoffice Impress on Windows (preferably the same version), you should. It will definitely work with the Impress presentation created in Ubuntu, just be sure to save it as the default ODP format, and open the file in Windows. This would preserve transitions and rendering ability on the Windows side of things - you could present directly from Impress on Windows (if needed).
The easiest way to solve this issue is to save the LibreOffice Impress file in its native ODP extension, on your Linux system. After you do that, access your Windows system, download and install the, then run it in order to open your ODP file on Windows 7.An alternative to this - in case you don't need to edit the presentation file on Windows - is to use your Linux's LibreOffice Impress to export the presentation as a PDF file, so you can then open it and switch it to 'presentation mode', which is nice if you want to use it e.g. On a business meeting.Concerning tables, pictures, polygons and other objects present in LibreOffice files (drawings, texts, presentations et cetera), there are known long-term issues that occur while LibreOffice converts to the Microsoft Office format (DOC, DOCX, PPT, PPTX, XLS, XLSX et cetera) files that contain such objects. Thus, it's wise to avoid attempting such conversions. Not even iWork (Apple's office suite) succeeds 100% when it tries to open (or convert) Microsoft Office files.PS: also notice that although PPTX is a 'XML PPT' and thus it uses an open source format, traditionally Open Office and it's forks (LibreOffice included) deal better with PPT files than with PPTX files.
Thus, you should definitely give the PPT extension a try.